If you were rooting for diversity to win out at this year's Oscars, only to throw up your hands and walk away from your screen when La La Land was announced as Best Picture, you missed something really important. La La Land didn't actually win. Moonlight did.

We were going hard for Ava DuVernay's 13th at this year's Oscars for the Best Documentary Feature category. Sadly, Ms. DuVernay's brilliant documentary did not take home the Oscar. However, the film that won still provided some much needed political commentary.

Viola Davis has just made Academy Award history with the announcement of her nomination for Best Supporting Actress in Fences. She's the first black woman to have ever earned three Oscar nominations, which is a stunning accomplishment in and of itself, even if she doesn't go on to win the award in question.

After years of #OscarsSoWhite complaints from film fans all over the world, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences seems to finally, truly be making a dent in changing the face of its membership.

In the same breath that last night's Oscars extolled the virtues of diversity and equal opportunity, they also seemed to punch down and turn their sights on another incredibly underrepresented group: Asian people.

In an interview with The New York Times, actress Lupita Nyong'o and The Daily Show host Trevor Noah sat down over brunch to talk about diversity in Hollywood (including #OscarsSoWhite), unconscious biases, and their own creative outlets.

Rooney Mara, who has received an Oscar nomination for her supporting role in Carol, has hesitated to weigh in on the ongoing #OscarsSoWhite controversy in part because of her regrets about taking the role of Tiger Lily in Pan. Warner Brothers' 2015 cinematic adaptation of J.M. Barrie's Peter Pan didn't do well at the box office, but even before its release, the film came under fire for casting Rooney Mara as a Native American character.

Fittingly, you will probably get 0 Oscars.

Leonardo DiCaprio's quest for an Oscar has become a running joke, and now that joke is a video game, wherein you run. A lot. Leo's Red Carpet Rampage is essentially the arcade game version of one of the madcap obstacle courses from Billy on the Street—which is to say it's awesome and hilarious.

Emma Thompson spoke to On Demand Entertainment about how important things like the Evening Standard's British Film Awards are, because they shine a spotlight on their national industry skill at crafting mid-budget "proper, grown-up dramas." The conversation turned briefly to the worldwide diversity conversation happening in the film now, and she had a very unusual solution regarding the "old, white men" that make up much of the Academy.

Meryl Streep just put her foot in her mouth in the worst way. When responding to a reporter's question about the all-white panel at the Berlin International Film Festival, Streep--the jury's current president--dismissed concerns about diversity, saying "we're all Africans, really."